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Hezbollah-backed Syria troops take key town Qusair
By FRANCE 24 the 20/05/2013 - 08:44

Pro-government Syrian forces backed by 
Lebanese Hezbollah militants stormed the rebel-held town of Qusair on 
Sunday, following a fierce aerial and artillery bombardment. The town is seen 
as of high strategic value by both regime and rebel forces. 
Syrian troops backed by Lebanese 
Hezbollah militants on Sunday entered the town of Qusair – a strategic 
rebel stronghold linking Damascus to the coast and seen as key to the 
battle for control of the country.
The advance into the town began early on Sunday morning with a heavy 
bombardment using artillery and warplanes, which the Britain-based 
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights watchdog said left at least 52 
people dead, including at least 21 rebels.
This was followed by a ground offensive on Sunday afternoon, with 
reports of pro-government troops engaging in house-to-house battles with rebel 
fighters.
Syrian state media said Assad’s troops took control of the main 
square, the area around the municipal building, a sports stadium and a 
local church.  Syrian state TV said troops arrested rebel fighters who 
tried to flee Qusair dressed as civilians.
Qusair 'a strategic priority for both sides'
The town, located close to the Lebanese border along a land corridor 
between Damascus and the Mediterranean coast, is seen as being of 
significant strategic value by both rebel and regime forces, and has 
been used to smuggle essential weapons and supplies from Lebanon across 
the porous frontier to opposition fighters inside Syria.
Qusair is also part of a coastal enclave that is the heartland of 
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite 
Islam, and the capture of Qusair and surrounding towns and villages has 
become a key objective for government forces.
Fighting has raged in the region for months, with Qusair besieged in 
recent weeks by pro-government gunmen backed by the Lebanese militant 
Hezbollah group.
FRANCE 24’s correspondent in Beirut, Lucy Fielder, said Qusair has 
been the scene of some of the fiercest fighting of the Syria uprising.
“It’s a strategic priority really for both sides,” she said. “It’s 
close to Lebanon so it’s been a key weapons route for the rebels and so 
that’s why both sides continue to fight over it.”
Attack casts doubt on Syria peace talks
The Syrian National Council, a key component of the main opposition 
National Coalition, denounced the "barbaric and destructive bombing" of 
Qusair. The Council warned that such fierce fighting could torpedo US-Russian 
attempts to organise a Syria peace conference scheduled for next month aimed at 
finding a political solution to the 
bloody conflict, which, according to the UN, has left more than 70,000 
dead.
Those talks already looked like facing significant challenges even 
before Sunday’s offensive, with Assad saying in a newspaper interview on the 
weekend that he won’t step down before the end of his mandate in 
2014 and that the United States has no right to interfere in his 
country’s politics.
Speaking to the Argentine newspaper Clarin, Assad insisted that a 
decision on Syria’s future was up to the Syrian people, not the US. He 
also said a decision on his political future must be made in elections, 
and not during such a conference.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s increasing involvement in Syria increases the risk of 
Israel becoming further drawn into the conflict, with concerns that the Assad 
regime is supplying weapons to militants in Lebanon.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Sunday that he is 
ready to act if Syria attempts to ship advanced Iranian weapons to 
Hezbollah, saying that “we are prepared for every scenario.” Earlier 
this month, Israel struck twice near Damascus, to intercept purported 
shipments to Hezbollah.
(FRANCE 24 with wires)
 
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Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20130520-syria-conflict-government-troops-hezbollah-enter-qusair

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